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Chambers wrote:
> Because the major selling points are style and a sense of superiority?
While true, that's not really the only advantage Apples have.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
I ordered stamps from Zazzle that read "Place Stamp Here".
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Darren New wrote:
> Chambers wrote:
>> Because the major selling points are style and a sense of superiority?
>
> While true, that's not really the only advantage Apples have.
A sense of superiority is an advantage?
Damn, why aren't more people using Lisp then? :-P
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scott wrote:
> serious broadcast-quality kit to do that job at desktop resolutions and
> frame rates.
Many cards for recording video have hardware chips to assist the h264
process. That's how they records TV with like 2% CPU usage for compression.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
I ordered stamps from Zazzle that read "Place Stamp Here".
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Darren New wrote:
> Chambers wrote:
>> Because the major selling points are style and a sense of superiority?
>
> While true, that's not really the only advantage Apples have.
>
I said "major selling points," not "only selling points"?
...Chambers
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Invisible wrote:
> Actually, what *might* be useful is if I could hook up my computer to
> another computer and record its output. (There are programs which are
> supposed to record what's on your screen, but none of them actually
> work.) I have no idea what kind of equipment you need to record a DVI
> signal though...
Cost me $15, including shipping. I got a pretty good deal, though; I
think these usually go for $20 +shipping.
If you want one that will decrypt digital cable, then it costs about
$250-$300. That's probably because there's only one on the market at
the moment (it has to accept a CableCard, a standard set by a consortium
of US Cable companies).
However, there are others that can accept digital cable signals that
aren't scrambled on the market for about $50.
Oh, and most of these cards do hardware MPEG encoding, so if you ask
Media Center to record something, it doesn't eat very many CPU cycles.
...Chambers
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Invisible wrote:
> Actually, what *might* be useful is if I could hook up my computer to
> another computer and record its output. (There are programs which are
> supposed to record what's on your screen, but none of them actually
> work.) I have no idea what kind of equipment you need to record a DVI
> signal though...
Look up Hauppage. They've got HDMI capture cards.
...Chambers
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Chambers wrote:
> Darren New wrote:
>> Chambers wrote:
>>> Because the major selling points are style and a sense of superiority?
>>
>> While true, that's not really the only advantage Apples have.
>>
>
> I said "major selling points," not "only selling points"?
>
> ...Chambers
Besides, style is something that actually can be worth paying for.
Otherwise, nobody would buy a Porsche.
OK, that's not quite true; Porsche's have style *and* performance. Now
that Apple has switched to standard PC components, it's really easy to
build a system that's equivalent but costs less, meaning the Macs only
have style.
I think I'm rambling; I probably need some sleep ;)
...Chambers
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Chambers wrote:
> Look up Hauppage. They've got HDMI capture cards.
Make sure you buy it from someplace you can return it to. I went through
three before I just gave up.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
I ordered stamps from Zazzle that read "Place Stamp Here".
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Darren New wrote:
> Chambers wrote:
>> Look up Hauppage. They've got HDMI capture cards.
>
> Make sure you buy it from someplace you can return it to. I went through
> three before I just gave up.
>
Was it faulty cards, buggy software, or simply a case of them not quite
doing what you thought they did?
...Chambers
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Chambers wrote:
> Darren New wrote:
>> Chambers wrote:
>>> Look up Hauppage. They've got HDMI capture cards.
>>
>> Make sure you buy it from someplace you can return it to. I went
>> through three before I just gave up.
>>
>
> Was it faulty cards, buggy software, or simply a case of them not quite
> doing what you thought they did?
Hard to say. The whole ecosystem is still a mess, really.
The first one would see the HDTV channels, but only with its own software.
If I gave it to media center, it would see either SDTV or HDTV but wouldn't
switch between.
The second actually came with a media center remote and said it works with
media center, but would only pick up HDTV sometimes and SDTV never, and
since half my channels are SDTV that was no good. Each time I tried
installing it, something different would happen.
The third claimed it works with x64 but didn't actually have any drivers
available, and I'm not about to start futzing with the registry to turn off
driver signing to support a capture card.
I suspect part of the problem is that none of the cards out there are really
ready to (a) talk to Vista media center and (b) deal with unencrypted HDTV
over cable. Probably if I was using an antenna it might have worked better.
I understand the Win7 MC software is much better with HD tuners, tho. Maybe
when I upgrade...
For now, everything I get HD I also get SD, so I can still record stuff if I
want.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
I ordered stamps from Zazzle that read "Place Stamp Here".
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